Almond Flour Muffins

I have been a huge fan of Michael Ruhlman’s book Ratio for quite some time. His work really came to life for me when I saw him speak at Blogher Food last year. He conveys his love of good food in a passionate manner, which I find compelling.So, when my friend Silvana invited me to participate in this month’s Ratio Rally, I said yes, even though I have not really baked using ratios and scales. I am definitely a numbers person though, so the concept is not a daunting one. If you don’t like numbers and scales, do not read any further. This post is not for you! If you’re into making recipe templates that can serve as the basis for numerous other recipes, then proceed. And get out that scale!

According to Ruhlman, “a quick bread is composed of cake batter ingredients that are stirred together.” He goes on to say that “muffins are quick breads baked into cups.” Hence, my decision to make muffins. Ruhlman’s ratio for making a quick bread using wheat flour is 2 parts flour: 2 parts liquid: 1 part egg: 1 part fat.

The ratio I came up with for muffins uses almond flour, and is 4 parts flour: 4 parts egg: 1 part sweetener. After much experimentation, I can say that I doubt these proportions will work with other flours as almond flour is a very unique ingredient.

So why create this recipe at all? Well, it is still versatile in two ways. First, it is a wonderful template for a muffin recipe. You can experiment by adding different flavor combinations including: date walnut, lemon poppyseed, dried cranberries with white chocolate chips, cinnamon raisin, and orange dark chocolate chip. Second, you can scale up the recipe and make as many muffins as you like. Double it for 8 muffins. Cut it in half for 2. It’s that flexible.

The ratio for making a basic, lightly sweetened almond flour muffin is (4:4:1), and here is the complete recipe:

To make a loaf of quick bread, simply double the above batter and bake it for 35-40 minutes on the lower rack of your oven in an 6-½ x 4-inch baby loaf pan (Luminarc).

My findings? Because almond flour is more wet than wheat flour, I ended up eliminating the 2 parts of liquid that Ruhlman used in his ratios. And because almond flour is more fatty than wheat flour I have eliminated the fat that was part of his formula. Finally, I used equal parts almond flour and egg in my recipe because almond flour is heavy and requires extra leavening, and eggs are a wonderfully simple form of leavening that is high in protein.

I did not have a hypothesis when I began this experiment. I based my ratio on Ruhlman’s and started out with liquids, fat and all sorts of unnecessary other ingredients (that I found are not relevant when baking with almond flour). In order to come up with the recipe above, I baked the muffins 4 times before the result was remotely edible, and 5 more times to perfect them. As you can see, when it comes to baking, hands on is the only way to go; guessing does not work.

Comments

I just made these muffins. First use of almond flour. First time baking gluten-free. I used lemon juice instead of vinegar and added a big handful of fresh blueberries. I also measured the flour and eggs on my scale (4 oz flour was a heaping cup). Otherwise followed exactly. Baked in 15 mins. Looked so gorgeous I took a photo of them! (Also they made 5 instead of 4; maybe due to the added berries?) And I did not wait to cut into a warm one which was perfect and popped out of the paper liner and into my happy mouth! I’m doing them for a glue free neighbor but she’s gonna have to share because these are AMAZING! And so quick and easy!

These are delicious! I add a 1/2 teaspoon of almond extract to the 4 muffin recipe, and they are perfect! I find that I have to bake them for about 20-22 minutes to get them golden brown. Thank you for this lovely, simple recipe!

Hello, Curious if you can offer advice for doing a sugar-free version of you you’re my muffins/scones? I have a son who has epilepsy…adhering to a Keto diet. Any idea if Stevia could be used instead of honey and what might be the ratio?

I have gestational diabetes that so far is not controlled by diet and I wanted muffins SO BAD. I bought almond flour but didn’t know what to do with it. I used this base recipe, doubled, used Splenda instead of honey, and ended up using 5 eggs because my chickens lay some tiny ones. I added frozen raspberries at the end because I know I cup of them is 15 g of carbs so even if I ate all 10 muffins I’d be fine! I also added a little shake of powdered peanut butter to give a little protein boost with relatively few added carbs. They came out a little wet in the center (I think from the raspberries) but not exactly doughy? I will have to try them in the morning to see if it goes away as they cool. I was thinking if they’re still like that I will microwave them before eating and hopefully it will steam out. I’m going to spread some natural peanut butter on them in the morning and eat a couple for breakfast, yum!

bettinamorton@me.com
Elana,
Thank you for your hard work creating this delicious base recipe! I just made my first batch and l ate one as soon as it was cool enough to not burn my tongue. I needed to use maple syrup instead of the honey and they still came out wonderful. This will now be my go-to muffin recipe! Thanks again.

Thanks so much Elana!
These muffins are so quick and easy. I added grated lemon zest to the mix, and topped the muffins with lemon butter icing. They are delicious. Do you have a suggestion so the muffins don’t stick to the paper liners? Well, I’m sure I can figure this out.
I’ve been gluten free of 14 months now, and it’s made a big and positive difference in my life. I’ve had hashimoto’s for over 30 years. You’re recipes are amazing and inspiring. Thanks again :)

Theresa, thanks so much for your comment! I also link to the brand of muffin liners that I use. To get that info, just click the green text “muffin liners” in the instructions portion of the recipe :-)

I liked that the recipe was simple and easy to follow. However, I didn’t much care for the taste…they tasted very bland. I would suggest adding blueberries, or another kind of fruit to add more flavor.

Thanks for this great recipe! I just doubled it and they came out great! I got 10 muffins. Since I am supposed to be counting my carbs, does anyone know about how many carbs would be in one of these muffins? Or how to figure that out?
Thanks!

Thank u for the recipes. I myself am not a sufferer of celiac but have 2 nieces & 1 nephew who are. I made this into a bread for Passover and it was received with wild enthusiasm. I’ve made a few other items on this site & all were a hit Be well Elana & thanks again! .

Hi Barbara, I have to confess I haven’t tried that. I don’t freeze my almond flour recipes because I usually have tons of boys here everyday gobbling up the food faster than I can make it! If you do experiment please let us know how it goes :-)

PERFECT BASE RECIPE!
I TRIED THIS RECIPE YESTERDAY AND I’M EXTREMELY HAPPY! I EXPANDED WITH ONE BATCH OF CANDIED GINGER AND LEMON ZEST AND ANOTHER BATCH WITH DRIED APRICOTS AND CARDAMOM. I ALSO APPRECIATE THE FACT THAT IT’S NOT TOO SWEET. SO, YOU CAN ADD OTHER SWEETER INGREDIENTS WHEN YOU WANT WITHOUT IT BEING OVERPOWERING AND TURNING INTO CUPCAKE. : )
MAHALO ELANA!

Thank you so very much Elana for your time and dedication to share with us all your deliciously healthy recipes. I’ve been trying some from your Keto recipes recently and I love them! The meatballs were amazing, the Beef Brisket super easy and recently the almond muffins. My muffins sank in the middle while cooling in the pan. I use Raw Almond Flour. Could this be why?

Love this recipe I love the variations I can do with this recipe. I am gluten-free and dairy free and yeast free I have celiac disease and love this recipe thank you so much for posting this. I am going grain free for my health and it is fantastic my joints everything feel so much better and my skin is amazing curious how do you feel about molasses in a recipe like this one that you posted ?I use Stevia in the raw for my sweetener because I’m also working to go sugar-free. I would love to know when you get a chance what you think about molasses in this recipe thank you.

Cathy, I’m so glad to hear you love this Almond Flour Muffins recipe! I haven’t tried molasses in these so not sure how that would work. Here’s a link to my Keto Diet Recipes page for you since you mentioned you’re going sugar-free:

I just found this recipe but had a question. The recipe calls for 4 oz of flour but the shows “about 1 cup”. Is that correct since a cup is 8 oz? I really want to try it but want to make sure I don’t use too mich flour.

Hi Elana, just found your site the other day and made the Choc. Zuccinni loaf, was beautiful, but I was wondering why you say to use Almond Flour and not Almond Meal. There is only one store near me that has the flour and it is twice the price of the meal.

These are absolutely delicious. We have made them twice and right off the bat, amazingly good. I worked backwards, so to speak. Both times I forgot that I didn’t have a full carton of eggs, so I just measured how many ounces of eggs I had and adjusted the flour to match. Both times it was close enough to the original recipe that I only tweaked the other measurements by making sure it was either just under or heaping. Worked great! Our additions: maple syrup instead of honey (2 tablespoons is one ounce) vanilla and chocolate chips. Otherwise followed the directions as written, used Wellbees almond flour, apple cider vinegar, baking soda. Cooked 17-18 minutes and let sit in the pan for 30 minutes after removing from the oven. Huge hit for my family and friends!

I have been experimenting. I’m not gluten intolerant but wanted a no carb breakfast muffin or similar alternative. I have now perfected the recipe for myself.
I double the recipe add a half a cup of unsweetened applesauce instead of the honey and make it as a loaf and it comes out really moist. I will try the scones next starting with the base recipe. Thank you for all these recipes

Tried this recipe and it was dry. I think maybe adding 2 additional eggs (total 4) may help. Flavor was great with the coconuts. I used Bob’s Almond Flour and it didn’t sink, but also didn’t rise as much as I’d hope for. Will definitely try again until I get the perfect texture!

Sorry if this is a silly question, but is there a difference between blanched almond and regular (non-blanched) almond flour? I went to the grocery store and bought almond flour and didn’t realize until I got home that it required for blanched almond flour. I’m wondering if this will suffice or if it will turn out different in texture, taste, etc. than expected.

Hi Elana,
My brother and I made these cupcakes for our school lunch boxes and they were delishus? we even doubled the recipe and they turned out fine. Thanks so much for your recipe we all loved it. From Mia????

Today is a cold, snow day here in Colorado and I felt like a warm treat for breakfast. I made these almond flour muffins for the first time. Followed the recipe exactly but tripled it so I could get a dozen and I also added 1/2 cup Lily’s dark chocolate chips. YUM! Moist and delicious! They turned out perfect! And very easy to make!

Thank you so much, Elana, for providing delicious options for those of us who care about what we put in our bodies! I’ve used many of your recipes and am always pleased! My personal favorites, in addition to these muffins, are the coconut flour tortillas and salt and pepper crackers!

I just made these and although they tasted much better than a coconut flour recipe I made they were D R Y! I mean like lodged in my throat dry and I even added blueberries to moisten the batter. We are not gluten free but I made Almond milk and I needed recipes to use the leftover meal for. I love the simplicity of the recipe, I just want it to be more moist.

Hi Monika, I’m sorry to hear the muffins did not turn out correctly for you. Unfortunately this recipe won’t work with almond pulp, it requires almond flour which although seems a bit similar is a very different ingredient. The best results come from using the recommended ingredients as well as the brands that are shown when clicking on the green text in the ingredient portion of the recipe. Thanks for sharing your concern and hope you enjoy the muffins in the future!

Elana, Monika’s problem may be the altitude. We live at almost 8000 ft, and every baked good needs adhpjustment. Perhaps if she added a couple of tablespoons or up to a 1/4 cup of applesauce or pumpkin the dryness would be remedied?

Hi Patricia, thanks for sharing your experience. I haven’t had to adjust this recipe at higher altitude. We live at 5,000 feet and have a second home at 8,000 feet and we make it often with good success :-)

Hi Monika i also make almond milk and use the pulp for baking. what i do is spread the pulp onto a baking sheet at put it in my toaster oven on the bottom rack and turn on the grill on a very lowest setting to dry out the moisture from the pulp (be sure to stir it a couple times for even drying) then put it in the food processor once cool and process it for a minute or two until its like very fine then that’s it almond flour. to put a little moisture in my muffin i use some butter and it works really well very soft and moist sometimes i put chocolate chips on it for the kids and they love it.

Hi there! I’ve really enjoyed browsing your blog. You have so many great recipes! Anyway, I’ve been looking for a simple muffin recipe, and this one seems to fit the bill, but unfortunately I’m not able to eat eggs. Do you know of a substitute I can use that would allow these muffins to come out right? I’m not much of a cook or baker, so I usually stick to ingredients. Unfortunately, I’m not able to eat flaxseed right now, either, so the “flax egg” method is out, too.

I’ve been a long time follower of your blog and this is one of my favorite recipes!
I’ve made these muffins for years and love the texture, taste, and high protein + low sugar combination.
My mom used to make me blueberry muffins for breakfast and I missed them when I gave up wheat.
I double the recipe and add about 3/4 cup of blueberries and it hits the spot every time.

So many blogs have come and go since I started reading them years ago, but yours is always my go-to for recipes.
I know you meticulously test your recipes and I’m guaranteed to get great results.

Great muffins! My family loves them. I substituted 1/4 cup puréed frozen blueberries for the honey. It makes them blue though (obviously, lol) and I added 1/8 tsp salt. I’ll definitely be making these again. (I’ve got thyroid issues so I wanted to make them as low in sugar as I could.) Thanks for the recipe.

Do you have any suggestions using convection oven? Browned beautiful on outside but inside still raw. New oven and need advice. Thanks! I know this is an older posting but curious if you or any readers have had this concern.

Hi Elana, I recently found out am sensitive to gluten, dairy, cane sugar and eggs too so thank you for this recipe! I used chia seeds (2 tblspoons to 6 tblspoons water) as an egg replacement (and it did not look like 4 ounces) with 4 ounces almon flour (1/2 cup) and found there was not enough liquid with the honey + apple cider vinegar. So, I improvised from looking at a few other recipes and added 1/8th cup of olive oil and 1/8 th cup of water … and about 3/4 cups frozen blueberries. They turned out ok altho I think I ended up cooking about 45 minutes and they 4 muffins were nicely browned. So a little nutty from the almond flour and chia seeds and super healthy. Will see what my hubby thinks in the morning. LOL My hubby thinks Ruhlman is the greatest and introduced me to Ratio, so will see if I can get away without the oil and may be add more water (or lemon juice?) next time. Thanks for the super easy and healthy recipe!!.

I’m confused because this is so different from the recipe in your almond-flour cookbook, which has 2 cups of flour to 1 egg. This has 1 cup to 4 eggs! I found I had to combine the 2 recipes to get it right, and now I am trying to piece it together. Can you explain the difference between the 2 muffins? I work as a personal chef and love most of your recipes. They work great. This was confusing to me.

I just found your blog today – I was thrilled, as I had won your books in a giveaway a couple of years ago :)
This muffin recipe looks like a fantastic base upon which to play. I’m going to try and throw some blueberries into the mix! Thanks for the idea!

I blanched almonds and made almond flour for the first time for this recipe (which was also my first time making this recipe). They turned out pretty good, golden and soft to the touch “as you would expect with a conventional muffin but they were a bit coarse. Could my flour not have been ground smoothly enough?

I just wanted to tell you that these muffins are delicious. They have the perfect texture, just like any muffin that it is not gluten nor dairy free. I’m so happy that I found this recipe! My oldest daughter is autistic and we are trying the best we can to stick to a gluten and dairy free diet, but breakfast and snacking are a challenge. These muffins are perfect for that, we have already made them with dark chocolate chunks, adding a bit more sugar to sweeten them up for dessert…they come out perfect every time. Thank you sooooo much!

I am in South Africa and battle to get certain ingredients. This recipe calls for blanched Almond flour can I use plain Almond flour. Also can I put cheese in this recipe as I am trying to make scones and cannot find a good recipe.

Blanched just means without the skin. I believe packaged almond flour it is blanched (w/out skins). I bought a huge bag of raw organic almonds online and had to blanch them before making the flour: Bring small pot of water to boiling, add almonds, then after no more than 60 seconds remove into a strainer. Skins come off easily. Let almonds cool and dry before grinding them into flour.

I am not a very skilled cook but I love this recipe for making bread & because it always comes out so good I hate to refrigerate it. Considering it has no preservatives how long can I leave this out & what is the best thing to wrap it in?
Any suggestions would be very welcomed!
Bethanie

I’m wanting to make “burger buns ” made with almond flour! I made the biscuits from your cook book “the Gluten-Free Almond Flour cookbook “. They were delicious, but a little too sweet for a bun. How much would I need to decrease the agave nectar or just omit it? Just want a gluten-free “burger bun “. I may have just answered my own question, but love to get your input. Thanks

Wow, I just made these. I doubled the recipe and made a few blueberry, a few raspberry and a few chocolate chip. They are lightly sweet and my 2 and 6 year old loved them as well. Thanks so much for your amazing recipes!

Elana, thank you for this wonderful muffin recipe! I made it with about a tsp of vanilla extract and about 6 oz of Ghirardelli 60% cacao bittersweet chocolate premium baking chips. I think this is the best paleo recipe I have used so far! I have your new cookbook and have only tried the paleo bread and banana bread (which is cooling now!) Looking forward to trying many more and appreciate your efforts to create delicious, healthy recipes.

I’m not sure if this has been said yet, but I just wanted to report that I made this recipe with almond meal (not blanched) just because it’s what I had on hand and still turned out PERFECTLY! I added some walnuts and cinnamon, maybe the best muffin recipe I’ve ever made! Thank you, Elana!

First time to this site. I tried the Almond Flour Muffins. The batter was so thick I couldn’t transfer it to the muffin tins so I added another egg to make it like a thick paste. Resulting muffins were dense and not sweet enough. I consider this effort a failure.

I love this recipe! So far I’ve made it twice. I substituted almond meal and added almost a cup of frozen organic blueberries…amazing. But tonight I made them even better – I added 3 very ripe bananas and a splash of cinnamon. They had to cook a little longer but they are so moist and delicious!!!

These are amazing! I divided the batter into 6 muffins, and they rose beautifully! My 2 eggs weighed just under 4 oz, so I added a tiny bit of applesauce to make up the difference.
I love having another option for breakfast on the weekend – thank you so much for sharing such a versatile base recipe! :-)

Hi Elana: Your recipes in your Almond Flour cookbook are so good! I also found some on your website that I liked better, though. The biscuits are wonderful! Instead of making only 4 at 1 1/2 inches thick, I rolled the dough to 3/4 inch thick and made about 8 biscuits which made about 5 days serving. My husband loves this with peach jam!
I especially enjoyed the vegan peanut butter cookies, but instead of using smooth peanut butter, I used nutty peanut butter and it made the cookies crunchier!!! I discovered that the cookies need to cool on the parchment paper before removing them to the cooling sheet. I removed one while hot and it crumbled!
Tonight I made muffins following the date pecan muffin recipe. I made some changes on that…I omitted ground nutmeg because my husband is allergic to spices; instead of using grapeseed oil, I used light olive oil because it has higher monounsaturated fat than the grape seed; I used canned apples packed in water and estimated about half of the can was equivalent to 2 apples; and since I didn’t have any pecans, I used walnuts. It was so good, but I think 1 tablespoon of vanilla is a bit too much. I would use half of that the next time I make this.
Is there any way I can make blueberry muffins without bananas? Eating anything with bananas turns into sugar and makes my blood sugar go down.
Thank you for the wonderful recipes made with almond flour!! I made some biscuits and blueberry muffins with gluten free flours (rice, potato, tapioca flours) and they were too gritty and I didn’t like those too much. Using almond flour is wonderful!
I would appreciate hearing from you about the blueberry muffins!

I just made this recipe, my 1s gluten free recipe ever! I did not have cider vinegar so I used rice vinegar. The muffins came out surprisingly well, nice texture, somewhat bland flavor, but I put a little honey on one and it was so nice to have a fresh baked muffin! I used paper muffin tin liners and the muffin stuck to the paper . . . I might grease the bottom of the paper next time. I think I will experiment adding some chopped cranberries or raisins next time . . . . will let you know how they turn out.

I tried out this recipe this morning and loved them! I added dried cranberries and some chocolate chips.. It was great with the raspberry jam I had but I also had one as a snack without it and they were equally tasty. I am a new fan Elena! I like that it makes a smaller quantity as well. And it was quick and easy to make this morning before heading off to work!

We are new to Paleo and everyone in the house raved about these! I had them with butter and warm apple butter, PERFECT! Thank you so much for making the recipe only 4 muffins as I could eat a hundred of them!

This is my go-to recipe for a quick snack. I just love them with some grass fed butter and preserves! My trick to getting them baked perfectly every time? I use Wilton square silicone baking cups on a (small) cookie sheet in my toaster oven! The rise is amazing – even better than the muffins I used to make with whole wheat!

I made these tonight and they were awful. I used my own homemade almond flour and it just didn’t cut it for me. Maybe by adding homemade apple sauce or homemade yogurt, then they will moisten up a bit. But these were way too dry. The ducks liked them, though!

I like xylitol as a sweetener better than agave syrup.. and I see agave syrup listed in many of your recipes. What might you suggest as fair substitution?

tonight I took half a cup of water and 1/4 cup xylitol and simmered it down to a reduction and used a tablespoon of that for the above recipe. the reduction was not as thick as agave syrup…. but the recipe came together fairly well, the muffins did rise.

These came out great! I made 6 muffins (to fit in my toaster oven). When my 3 eggs measured 5.25 oz, I added SCD yogurt to get to 6 oz, and everything else was per the recipe. What a lovely, flexible recipe!!

I turned this recipe into blueberry muffins, and they were so good! My wheat-eating husband couldn’t even tell that they weren’t regular muffins. I doubled the recipe, used raw honey instead of agave, added 1/4 t sea salt, added 1 t vanilla extract, omitted the vinegar and added the juice and zest of one lemon. After mixing the wet and dry ingredients, I folded in 1 cup of frozen blueberries. It made 10 muffins and I did have to bake them longer (20 min at 350 and then I turned the oven down to 325 for another 5 minutes). I loved that there was no extra fat in the recipe as I find many of the almond or coconut flour muffins with added oil or butter to be too greasy. These didn’t stick to the wrappers, they were moist, but they weren’t the least bit greasy. I plan to make these again and again!

Thank you for these awesome recipes. I have been searching for recipes which are non dairy sources of calcium, and this site is just awesome. My first attempt at eating these muffins I found them a little dry, so I had to make a large cup of coffee or chocolate almond milk. But I could not tell the difference between regular muffins and these. I added walnuts and frozen blueberries which are available year round. I control how much sugar I ingest by putting just a dollop of honey on top of each muffin. Heavenly!

I just made these with cranberries and followed your instructions exactly (rare for me…) and they turned out amazing. I’ll be stuck at a hotel for the next 5 days for a curly hair event and the menu is not gluten free friendly. I made these to bring along to have a healthy emergency snack. The texture is great and I love that there’s only 1T of sweetener in them. Thank you so much, this will be my new go-to muffin recipe. – Jess

I’d like to know what is meant by “ounces” here – this may have caused problems for others who posted that these didn’t turn out:
4 oz of almond flour – is this weighed? I assumed so because the recipe says about a cup.
1 oz agave nectar – I assume this is fluid ounces, and not weighed, since it’s a liquid.
4 oz of eggs – are the eggs also fluid ounces?

This is one of the many problems with the old Imperial measuring system, that ounces can mean a weight or a size!

this recipe does not seem to work. I followed it exactly. They need salt, they taste flat. They are also raw in the middle. any suggestion of what I could have done wrong? I think this recipe either needs to be modified or needs more instruction. Sorry Elana.

I just make these, they did not work at all. What did I do wrong?They taste like they need salt. They are raw in the middle…I followed recipe exactly. Sorry but I think this recipe needs to be modified.

Made these tonight. Due to some of the comments I decided to add some cinnamon, salt and chopped green apple. They came out good -a bit dense but just how I like them. Next time I’ll add a bit more spice. Excellent!

I just made these muffins. I ground the almonds and tried it. It is amazing. I have been doing gluten free for more than a year now and did not know that you could use just simple almonds to bake. Gluten free flours are dense and tend to flop sometimes. This turned out great. Thank you. I am glad I found your site.

My dream is to have a small shop, filled with yummy gluten and diary free goodies.

Hi Elana! I wanted to let you know that I made these, with a few variations, and they were so delicious! I posted my modified recipe on my own blog, but of course I gave you credit for creating the template! Also, my husband pronounced them the best muffins he has ever tasted- and neither of us are strictly gluten-free!
Thanks for another awesome recipe!

Elana,
Thank you for joining the ratio rally. It is one area I am not really good in, math. I can do cooking fractions and thats about it! Anyway, I just thought I would let you know that I have tripled this recipe, added a splash extra of vanilla and baked it in a regular size loaf pan. It consistantly turns out a beautiful loaf of Victoria Sponge Cake worthy of any British tea table! Absolutly divine with butter and raspberry jam. I also make this leaving out most of the vanilla and call it our daily bread. It stores well in the fridge. It keeps a soft texture after many days, and the taste is great with everything.
Thanks again!

These are the best nut flour muffins I have tried, and I just baked them for the second time. They are so like regular flour muffins! Moist but not greasy like other low carb muffin recipes. I added 4 oz. chopped apple and 1/2t cinnamon and used 2T granulated ZSweet (erythritol/stevia) instead of agave. They are fabulous. Any recipe I have tried of yours turns out perfectly- very like their flour/sugar counterparts. (My husband loves the almond joy “snack cake” and another site had your almond butter olive bread, which was divine!!) Thanks so much!

Hello I tried this recipe over the weekend (thank you for posting it). For me this turned out very dry and I had to drink something just to swallow each bite – but other than that it was very nice. Is there anything that one could add to make it substantially more moist? I did bake it for exactly 15 min until the top/sides were very slightly browned. Thank you!!

Hi!
I’m new to the gluten-free diet. My roommate was recently semi-diagnosed with IBS/Crohn’s and we have him on the Specific Carb Diet. Since Gluten-free is more known, It’s easier to find those recipes. And since some of the recipes can be used in the Specific Carb Diet, I took a look at yours =) -Of course, I’m learning what to tweak if needed for the difference between the two.
Last night I attempted to make these muffins. I never weigh ingredients, but noticed that it says 4 oz of the nut flour is about 1 cup. I measured out 1 cup and then 2 eggs. Before mixing the 2, I saw that it looked like it would be too eggy and it wouldn’t be equal parts. I then poured the 1 cup of nut flour into another measuring cup and it equals out to 8 oz. So I cut it down to 1/2 cup nut flour. I added some vanilla extract & fresh fruit to the muffins & baked them and they came out really good.
Just checking if the 4 oz. of nut flour should be 1/2 cup or actually 1 cup?
Thanks!

Hmm…I definitely thought these needed some salt because they were pretty dense and bland. The denseness makes sense because of the almond flour, but it didn’t necessarily make it a tasty muffin. I added some jam, and that was better, but I can’t say I was in love with them. I could add some more stuff to them (nuts, cranberries, etc.) but I’m not sure I’m in love enough with the original recipe to deviate from it. :-(

Hi Elana,
I heard about you a few months ago on the Whole Life Nutrition Kitchen site when they were giving away a copy of your cookbook. I didn’t win, so I had to buy it and have been loving it ever since. (ordered 5 lbs of almond flour from Honeyville) I also made a almond flour muffins for the ratio rally – taking inspiration from you and elsewhere.

Love your site & your recipes always make me salivate! A quick question about making your own almond milk, as it so expensive in stores, can you re-use the ground almonds after for baking with?
I know this is a bit of a random comment for this recipe!

I doubled the recipe, added a container of organic pumpkin baby food and about 1/4 cup of chia seeds and it produced 12 AMAZING muffins… my family wishes it made 24 muffins :) They were gone in no time :)

hiya- I wonder if anyone can answer a couple of my questions – there are a couple of things about ingredients and ratios that are really puzzling me…

when I first started making the bread mix (from your simple bread recipe) the batter was really runny – and I was able to pour it into the loaf tin…now when I make it, it’s so sticky, I can hardly get it off the spoon! What would the difference be in the ingredients or ratios that I’m using? I can’t remember if maybe I used to add oil? What would that do to a recipe? or maybe I used more eggs? I just can’t remember (now I’m using 2.5cups of almond flour, 3 eggs etc). Any ideas would be much appreciated!

the other thing is, I make almond flour muffins – following a couple of recipes from your book (which I love!) – but I use 2.5 cups of almond flour – and 3 eggs? And they always come out really nicely – what would the difference be if I used 1 cup and 2 eggs as in your recipe here (or 2 cups and 4 eggs), which means there’s a lot more eggs per almond flour!

I’m new to baking and would love some advice!

PS. YOur site has kept me going during a very low point in my health with colitis, so thank you very much x

I made the muffins yesterday and I added pistachios and some dark choc chips and I have to say they were amazing and I also made the vegan chocolate frosting for the first time and it is the closest thing I have come to tasting like real frosting…Thank you Elana

I love the concept or starting a recipe with a ratio. With gluten-free baking, I always try to first tweak someone else’s recipe, but this ratio idea is intriguing. I’ll see what I can come up with. Thank you for posting this :)

Interesting. I made several batches, too, using different ratios, and came out with some wonderful door stops, dog treats, and odd looking muffins. I did end up with a similar MR ratio, but because I counted the yogurt/sour cream, mashed banana and egg white as liquid. Loved reading about your process – I love the rise on your muffins – nice!

Hi Elena – first of all I love your book and site. We had the shrimp fritters for dinner and they are outstanding!!

So I made these muffins after soaking, dehydrating and grinding my own almonds (digestion issues galore) and I did add some sunbutter for a thicker consistency. And…the insides turned bright green!!! Has this ever happened to you? A reaction with the ACV and soda? I’m so curious and bummed to toss them if need be. Hoping you have an answer for me! Thanks so much…Jen

I was just looking into buying a scale. Is there a scale you recommend? Is it better to go digital or the old fashioned kind? I feel like I’m coming across more and more recipes written in grams and ounces rather than cups- any thoughts why this may be?

I got OXO’s digital scale with the pull out display (great feature for large items on the scale) for about $50.00 at Bed Bath and Beyond, plus 20% off with a coupon. I love it. It converts easily for pounds to grams and tares very easily.

Love that you did all of this testing for us! I own Ratio and love it, but haven’t really put it into practice, because as we all know, gluten-free flour does not act like wheat flour…and one gluten-free flour does not necessarily act like another. But I love using almond flour and love that this ratio is now here! Now, what type of muffins will I make? :)

Elana,
These muffins look amazing. Also being a math person, I love the ratio approach. This is actually how I learned to cook quick breads back when my mother taught me at age 7 or 8. I suspect she was teaching me fractions as well. Love it. Can’t wait to taste them. Thanks. Deb

I just ordered a Procizion Digital Kitchen Food Scale from Amazon! On my first try with this recipe I used Elana’s “about a cup, about a 1/4 tsp, etc” and they turned out well but now I’ll be able to actually weigh the ingredients and get it exactly right.

Lovely simple recipe, Elana! Great to now this ratio can be used for all kinds of muffins made with almond flour. :-) Love Ruhlman and you! Both of you are very passionate, talented folks inside and outside the kitchen. ;-)

These muffins remind me of your Irish Soda Bread Recipe minus the raisins. I left a question under that recipe because my Irish Soda Bread did not look like yours…it tasted great, though! Mine was bumpy, but yours looked smooth. Did you mix the ingredients by hand or with a mixer? I did not receive an answer so I thought I would post here. Not sure what the correct procedure is. Also, I couldn’t put an x in it because the dough was so sticky. Any helpful hints? I love the recipe and look forward to trying your muffins also!

oooh- i’ve been playing with quick-breads this week too. and something like ratios!

must play with muffins. we’ve settled on soured brown rice flatbreads in a cast iron skillet, and sprouted quinoa in a similar form (quinoa doesn’t like to sour)- the only way we eat any grains is after souring them for 24-48 hours. It makes a totally different batter and final product than regular grains.

also playing with coconut and almond flour b/c this site is so amazing and we love the paleo foods!

Oh, this is SO awesome, Elana! I read Ratio just before going gluten-free. Loved it, but had no notion of how to use the concept with my new dietary restrictions. Thank you so much for figuring this out!

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